ECB needs fresh powers to intervene in bank failures, supervisor says

Reuters  |  FRANKFURT 

FRANKFURT (Reuters) - The European Central needs fresh powers to freeze payments temporarily at heading towards failure, halting a potentially fatal outflow of liquidity, Daniele Nouy, the ECB's top supervisor said on Friday.

The ECB, which supervises the euro zone's biggest banks, was tested in recent months when several top lenders failed in quick succession, including Spain's Banco Popular, which collapsed when liquidity dried up in a matter of days.

"In my view... the introduction of adequate moratorium power for authorities is needed in order to react with the needed flexibility, if the situation of a deteriorates rapidly," Nouy told a member of the European Parliament in a letter.

"Given the potentially swift evolution of liquidity crises, a moratorium tool could be necessary to ensure there is adequate time for ensuring a credible solution," Nouy said, adding that the will soon publish an opinion on this issue.

Countries like Greece or Germany allow for such freezes but not Spain, and wants uniform rules across the euro zone.

Supervisors are also concerned that when a is near collapse but not yet legally deemed "failing or likely to fail", they lack the tool to intervene and prevent the death spiral.

The moratorium tool could maintain some liquidity, allowing authorities to guide the either into orderly resolution or a rescue.

The European Commission late last year proposed giving supervisors the authority to suspend some deposit withdrawals and payments obligations in exceptional circumstances.

While the Commission proposal would excluded deposits under 100,000 euros, the Single Resolution Board has warned that significant amounts of cash could leave the if the moratorium was excessively narrow.

Lawmakers since the Banco Popular failure have debated whether to include even smaller deposits in the moratorium.

(Reporting by Balazs Koranyi)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)